Abstract
Steady state relative permeability experiments are performed by coinjection of two (or more) immiscible fluids. The relative permeabilities can be calculated directly from the stabilized pressure drop and saturation of the core if capillary end effects and transient effects are negligible. In most cases such conditions are difficult to obtain.This work presents an analytical solution in form of explicit expressions for the spatial profiles of pressure gradients and saturation, average saturation and pressure drop for a core being injected simultaneously with two phases at steady state when capillary end effects are significant. When arbitrary saturation functions are applied, such parameters and distributions can only by obtained by numerical integration.By assumption of simplified saturation function correlations the differential equation describing steady state can be integrated. A new dimensionless capillary number N is obtained which contains the fluid and rock parameters, but also the saturation function parameters (relative permeability and capillary pressure), fluid viscosities, injected flow fraction, total flow rate and more. It is shown that when this number is of magnitude 1, end effects cover parts of the core, but parts of the core are also unaffected. For N>10 the end effects are negligible, while for N<10 end effects are dominant.This paper gives the first formal proof of the intercept method from basic assumptions. It is shown that when the inlet saturation is sufficiently close to that of a no capillary pressure situation; the average saturation changes linearly with the inverse of total rate towards the saturation corresponding to no capillary forces; also, the pressure drop divided by the pressure drop of a no end effect situation goes linearly towards 1 with the inverse of total rate.
Highlights
Relative permeabilities are parameters describing how the mobility of a phase is affected in presence of other fluids in a porous medium
Leverett (1941) stated that the natural outlet boundary condition is a zero capillary pressure. This follows from the phase pressures being continuous towards the outlet where both phases are produced and that the radius of curvature goes from a small value in the pore space to infinity
The magnitude of the capillary number was very characteristic of end effect behavior
Summary
Relative permeabilities are parameters describing how the mobility of a phase is affected in presence of other fluids in a porous medium. Accurate measurements of relative permeability are required for making reliable predictions and decisions at field scale Such measurements are traditionally performed either by the unsteady state method where one fluid is injected to displace the other or the steady state method where both fluids are co-injected. Leverett (1941) stated that the natural outlet boundary condition is a zero capillary pressure This follows from the phase pressures being continuous towards the outlet where both phases are produced and that the radius of curvature goes from a small value in the pore space to (practically) infinity.
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